Did you know Aotearoa's five most common languages are English, te reo Māori, Samoan, Mandarin and Hindi…
With end-of-year festivities fast approaching, our Palmerston North centre has started celebrating already…
Another great bunch of ELP's graduates are celebrating their success. Nine people in this ‘Professional Speaking…
Getting to grips with a new area of Kiwi English can be a slightly creepy experience – when the area involves…
Visiting a herb farm is a great way to give ‘post-lockdown' help to a local herb farm, while learning English…
Flexibility and adaptability are the key ingredients to ELP’s success, says former CE Nicola Sutton. Ms Sutton…
Some of New Zealand's new immigrants will be exercising their vote despite facing significant barriers to information…
English Language Partners is proud to assist in the fight against COVID-19, and of course, is displaying the COVID…
Nicola Sutton, Chief Executive | English Language Partners New Zealand ‘Necessity is the mother of invention’…
Lubu Mashi has won the ELPNZ 2020 Refugee Achievement Award, with all members of the ELP Porirua team…
Kia ora Minister Poto Williams for thanking ELPNZ's superhero volunteers – who carried on tirelessly during Covid-19…
CE Nicola Sutton from ELPNZ, reflects on 2020's Year of Lifelong Learning
Thuy Tran shares her experiences in searching for employment. She recently started her first job in Wellington.
Exciting merger: introducing our English Language Partners Central & West centre.
“His empathy towards victims, I imagine, is birthed out of his own challenges and trials in El Salvador,” Inspector…
English Language Partners has downloadable posters featuring Aotearoa’s community languages: ‘Aotearoa, we all belong’; ‘You’re welcome’ and ‘Our people, our cultures, our languages.’
It's International Mother Language Day on the 21st February. 2019 is also International Year of Indigenous Languages…
Ngā mihi o te wā – season’s greetings Former refugees and migrants are typically hard-working and highly-motivated.
It is not so easy to be an immigrant and come to live in another country which is so different from your own.